• Start
  • Previous
  • 9 /
  • Next
  • End
  •  
  • Download HTML
  • Download Word
  • Download PDF
  • visits: 3848 / Download: 3990
Size Size Size
Islam & Physical Care

Islam & Physical Care

Author:
Publisher: www.alhassanain.org/english
English

This book is corrected and edited by Al-Hassanain (p) Institue for Islamic Heritage and Thought

Islam & Physical Care

Author: Al Balagh Foundation

Table of Contents

The Foundation's Word 3

Preface 4

Firstly: Providing the body with its different needs 8

A. Food and Drink: 8

B .Marriage: 9

C. Clothing and Elegance: 10

D. Rest and Sleep: 11

E. Physical Exercises: 12

Secondly: Preserving and Protecting the Human Body 14

1. Call for moderation: 14

2. Forbidding the Harmful: 15

3. Purification and Cleanliness: 15

4. Immunity and Medical Treatment: 16

Thirdly: Proper Use Of Physical Abilities 18

A Tradition puts this in a different style: 19

Notes 20

The Foundation's Word

Praise be to Allah Whose divine legislation defined the lawful and the unlawful, allowed the good things, and forbade the filthy things. Blessing and peace be upon our Master, Muhammed, who conveyed the laws and guided humanity, and upon his pure progeny and righteous companions.

The current materialistic cultures, both Eastern and Western, present the ugliest pictures of social corruption, and the cruelest stage of political despotism that man has ever experienced since the very ancient times Though the present Super Powers take pride in their attaining a record degree of technological progress, yet the materialistic cultural concepts holding the reins of power, and standing behind this scientific progress, have deteriorated to the lowest possible degree of moral meanness and backwardness. What perfection can one expect from man dominated by vague ideas and materialistic concepts that drag him down to the level of animals in society, and cause him to aim at exterminating millions through political schemes and formidable military arsenals?

One may ask: Isn't Islam present and known in the world? So, why doesn't Islam play its role of Salvation? The answer is easy and explicit: The medicine is there, but if not used by the patient, would avail him nothing whatsoever. Nay, there are even international pressures against using this healing medicine, and the patient might even be prescribed what makes him worse. The Glorious Qur'an does away with all confusion which may befall man concerning Why do people go astray? It says that they, of their own accord, have chosen the path of Satan, kept away from the path of the Beneficent, rejected the signs of Allah, disregarded His right method and straight path, stuck to the earth, and shunned Allah's Islam. Allah, the Almighty says:

 سأصرف عن آياتي الذين يتكبرون في الارض بغير الحق , وإن يروا كلّ آية لا يؤمنوا بها , وإن يروا سبيل الرشد لا يتخذوه سبيلا , وإن يروا سبيل الغيّ يتخذوه سبيلا , ذلك بأنهم كذّبوا بآياتنا وكانوا عنها غافلين   الأعراف / 146

'' I shall turn away from My revelation those who magnify themselves wrongfully in the earth.

And if they see every sign they will not believe in it.

And if they see the way of righteousness they do not choose it for their way,

And if they see the way of error they choose it for their way.

That is because they denied Our revelations and were heedless of them.'' Sura Al-A'raf 7:146

Al-Balagh Foundation, while presenting to its respected readers this study on Islam and Physical Care, as a witness to the universality of Islam, its efficiency and perfection, asks Allah the Exalted to provide us with the power enabling us to carry out His commands, perform what brings His consent and reward, and support our Jihad with clear triumph.

Allah is the Hearer, the Responder!

Al-BALAGH FOUNDATION

Preface

The body is the storehouse of man's energy, and the generator of the power of motion which participates in the fields of goodness, construction, colonization and ref ormation of the earth. Man can perform no work, whether religious, reformative or constructive, without the use of physical strength. The one who prays, the one who fasts, the pilgrim, the fighter, the businessman, the thinker, the merchant, the worker, the farmer, the scientist, the student, and the others, all need some physical energy to perform their roles and duties. Physical energy is the means and instrument by which man can implement his goals and aims. So, the body is the storehouse of this energy, and the generator of all movements carried out through the body's different instruments, such as hands, legs, eyes, ears, tongue, etc.. Allah the Exalted has given man his body so that he may be able to implement his aims and goals in life. It is one of Allah's blessings and creations, given to man to use it to enact the decisions of his life according to Allah's plan that defines his dealings in life, and charts out his way of living; as man's body is created in such a shape to suit the natural conditions and circumstances surrounding him:

  لقد خلقنا الأنسان في أحسن تقويم

  التين / 4

"Surely We created man of the best stature. '' Sura Al- Tin 95:4

In order to suit the human responsibilities imposed upon him, it is a sacred duty of man to care for, and look after the physical soundness of his body duly stressed and encouraged by the Glorious Qur' an:

  وأبتغ فيما آتاك الله الدار الآخرة ولا تنسَ نصيبك َ من الدنيا ...   القَصص /77

"But seek the abode of the Hereafter in that which Allah hath given thee and neglect not thy portion of the world... '' Sura Al - Qasas 28:77

This is for the sake of keeping man's natural system and its balance, which is to regulate nature's laws in the human body. Actually, this is to enact these laws on a harmonious balance with other laws of the natural existence around him. The body is a portent of innovation, creation and activity. To contemplate its order, its astonishing structure and the wonders of its making, expands the horizons of knowledge, of heading for Allah the Exalted and of discovering the secrets of existence, by which man would have stronger faith and would enjoy life much better.

  فلينظر الأنسان ممَّ خلقَ   الطارق / 5   4

"So let man consider from what he is created '' Sura Al-Ta riq 86: 5

  قلْ هوَ الذي أشأكمْ وجعل َ لكم السّمعَ والابصار والأفئدةَ قليلاً ما تشكرونَ   الملك / 23

"Say unto them O Mohammad: He It is Who gave you being, and hath assigned unto you ears and eyes and hearts : small thanks give ye! '' Sure Al - Mulk 67:23

  سنريهم آساتنا في الآفاق وفي أنفسهم حتى يتبين لهم أنه الحق ّ, أولم ْ يكفِ بربك أنه على كلِّ شيء شهيد   فصلت / 53

"We shall show them Our portents on the horizons and within themselves until it will be manifest unto them that it is the Truth. Doth not thy Lord suffice, since He is Witness over all things? '' Sura Al- Sujda 41:53

How Does Islam Handle the Body?

  قال له صاحبه وهو يحاوره أكفرت بالذي خلقك من تراب ثم من نطفة ثمَ سوّاك رجلا   الكهف / 37

"And his comrade, while he disputed with him, exclaimed: Do you disbelieve in Him Who created you from dust, then of a small life-germ, and then He made you a perfect man?''

Sure Al - Keht 18:37

  ...هو أنشأكم من الارض واستعمركم فيها ...   هود / 61

"... He brought you into being from the earth and made you dwell in it...'' Sura Hud 11:61  5

  وجعل فيها رواسي من فوقها وبارك فيها وقدّر فيها أقواتها في أربعة أيام سواء للسائلين   فصلت / 10

"He placed therein firm hills rising above it, and blessed it and measured therein its sustenance in four Days, alike for all who ask.'' Sure Ha Mim 41:10

  هو الذي جعل لكم الأرض ذلولا فامشوا في مناكبها وكلوا من رزقه وإليه النشور   الملك / 15

"He it is Who made the earth smooth for you, so walk in the paths thereof and eat of His providence. And to Him will be the resurrection of the dead.'' Sure Al - Mulk 67:15

  يا أيها الناس كلوا مما في الأرض حلالا طيبا ...  البقرة / 168

"O Mankind! Eat of that which is lawful and good in the earth...'' Sure Al - Baqara 2:168

  ...كلوا من رزق ربكم وأشكرو له ...   سبأ / 15

"... Eat of the provision of your Lord and render thanks to Him...'' Sure Sabe'34:15

  كلوا من طيبات ما رزقناكم ولا تطغوا فيه فيحل عليكم غضبي ...   طه / 81

"Eat of the good things which We have provided you, and transgress not in respect to them, lest My wrath come upon you...'' Sure Taha 20:81

  يا بني آدم خذوا زينتكم عند كل مسجد وكلوا واشربوا ولا تسرفوا إنه لا يحب المسرفين   الاعراف /31

"O Children of Adam! Look to your adornment at every time of worship, and eat and drink, but be not prodigal. surely He does not love the prodigals.'' Sure Al - A ref 7:31

  قل من حرم زينة الله التي أخرجت لعباده والطيبات من الرزق قل هي للذين آمنوا في الحياة الدنيا خالصة يوم القيامة كذلك نفصل الآيات لقوم يعلمون  .  الاعراف/32

"Say: Who has forbidden the adornment ot AIlah which He has brought forth for His servants, and the good provisions? Say: These are for the believers, during the lift' of the world purely theirs on the Resurrection Day. Thus do we detail Our revelation for people who know. SuraAl-Arat 7:32

"And certainly We sent messengers to mankind before you, and We gave them wives and offspring... SuraAI-Rad 13:38

"And of His signs is this: He created for you mates from yourselves that ye might find rest in them... Sura Al - Rum 30:21

"0 Children of Adam! We have sent down to you clothing to cover your shame.... " Sure Al -Araf 7:26

"And of !Iis signs is your sleeping and seeking of His Grace by night and by day.... " Sure Al - Rum 30:23

These wonderful Qur'anic verses mentioned above reveal a number of interesting laws and concepts. Going through their meanings, connecting them together, unifying their implications, and infering their ideological and legislative goals, we reach the following facts: A. Man, because of his physical structure and nature, is a part of the natural world: the earth being the origin of his creation, he is its son and its most advanced living being, in respect to his structure and different physical organs:

"... Do you disbelieve in Him Who created you from dust....'' Sura Al - Kahf 18:37

"... He brought you into being from the earth....'' Sure Hud 11:61

B. This body which has been created of the earth, cannot by its nature, do without the provisions of the earth such as food, drink, clothes and dwelling, etc.: "We did not give them bodies that would not eat food...'' Sura Al - Anbiya 21:8

C. There is a complete coordination between Man and Nature. Whatever is needed by man to sustain him is plentiful and increasingly available in the world of nature:

"...and blessed it the eGrth and measured therein its sustenance in four Days, alike for all who ask.'' Sura Ha Mim 41:10

"He It is Who made the earth smooth for you...'' Sura Al - Mu/k 67:15 So, in the expanse of the earth there are provisions for all creatures in general, and for particular - paved and prepared for everybody: "...a like for a ll who ask,'' Sure Ha Mim 41:10

".... and measured therein its sustenance...'' Sure Ha Mim 41:10

Here, in the order of creation, the equation of existence is proportionally equal between the human needs and the quantity of provision offered in nature, in perfect harmony to its balance and accuracy: "Surely! We have created every thing by measure.'' Sure Al - Qemar 54:49

D. Whatever amenities are there on this earth are lawful, good and permitted to all mankind, without discrimination or prejudice, since Allah's wisdom and justice ordain that every being should be provided with his requirements and shares allotted to him in life: "O Mankind! Eat of that which is lawful and good in the earth...'' Sura Al - Baqara 2:168

E. Man, as an individual, has been created as a biological unit with complete organs and potentialities. Man is an independent world by himself, practicing his natural relations according to this creative fact connecting him to nature from every angle. So, he has to perform his personal activity and continue his efforts in harmony with his surroundings:

"... So walk in the paths thereof...'' Sure Al - Mulk 67:15

He moves here and there on the earth, interacts with nature and its energies and wealths, so as to build a connecting bridge between his body and the provisions of the erh. These natural elements take their positions inside his body, playing the role of a human energy presenting humane offerings and human efforts, different from their free and natural existence outside. Thus, these offerings appear in the shapes of thought, worship, arts and other different works, such as husbandry, life reformation, multiplication of species, etc.

In this way man interacts, through his physical nature, with nature itself, to change its stagnant materialistic energies into a humane power that flows with good ideas and vitality, and fills the world with values and means for culture and civilization. F. As man requires nourishments in order to live, he is also in need of other requirements which participate in keeping life going on, such as matrimonial relations, clothes, comfort, sleep, etc., which are regarded as the basic necessities of life, and hence to satisfy them is part of the human creation system, ordained by Allah.

Islam, as a religion, is keen on preserving life, and responds to the needs of creation. Through its teachings and laws it covers all these needs of the human nature, and organizes them:

"And of His signs is that: He created for you mates from yourselves that you may find rest in them...'' Sure Al - Rum 30:21

"o children of Adam! We have sent down to you clothing to cover your shame...'' Sura Al -A rat 7:26

"And of His signs is your sleeping by night and by Sura Al - Rum 30:23

In this way Islam understood man's physical requirements, legislated rules and regulations, decided on values sufficient for him, and arranged its laws and concepts revolving around three axes,each depending on the other:

1. Providing the body with its different physical needs, such as: food, drink, dwelling and clothes.

2. Preserving and protecting the human body against whatever endangers its existence.

3. Employing physical powers in their natural channels defined for them.

The above points are dealt with as below:

Firstly: Providing the body with its different needs

A. Food and Drink:

"Let man consider his food.'' Sura Abasa 80:24 One of Allah's great portents, wonderful procedure and blessings for man is that his natural food available on the earth, consists of two elements: The first element are the materials found in nature, such as salts, vitamins, carbohydrates, etc., available in large quantities to meet the requirement of all living beings, animals and plants.

The other element which Divine Care added to the human food to suit man's psychological and mental taste is the attraction to beauty and to its pleasure and enjoyment. He uses the pleasing, beautiful and attractive form as encouraging factors assisting him to have agreeable psychological connection with food and drink. This is of course, besides feeling the pains of hunger and thirst. Fruits, vegetables, meat, honey, suger, nuts, water, etc., all appear within an attractive beautiful frame, with a palatable, and delicious taste, offered to man on a tray of pleasing charm, and a feeling saturated with pleasure and enjoyment. There are numerous Texts and Traditions to the effect that man has full right to food and drink and to avail himself of all delicacies and amemties, provided by nature.

Imam Ja'far ibn Muiiammed Al-Sadiq A.S.1 said: "The body is built on bread"2

He also said:

"Allah the Exalted has created the son of Adam hollow; so he has to have food and drink."3 "O Allah! Bless our bread and do not make seperation between us, as without the bread we could neither fast nor pray or perform our duties towards our Lord the Almighty and most High."4

The Prophet S.A5 is stated to have approved meat and olives and said:

"Meat is the best of food in this world and in the hereafter.''6 And also:

"Eat olive-oil, and anoint with olive-oil, as it is a blessed tree.''7 Imani Al-Sadiq A.S. used to prompt people to eat honey, cooking utter, milk, vegetables and assorted fruits, saying: "There is no better cure for people than honey.''8 He also said:

"Butter is the best that enters a stomach, but I hate it for the aged.''9 "Take to milk, as it grows the flesh and strengthens the bone.''10 "Eating beans increases the marrow of the leg-bones, enlarges the brain and produces fresh blood.''11 Asked about Allah's saying:

"... and let him see what food is purest there and bring you a provision from it.'' Sure Al-Kahf 18:19 He replied:

"The date is the purest food.''12

"The raisins strengthen the nerves, relieve fatigue, and give good smell to improve the breath.''13 Imam Al- Rida A.S. is quoted to have said:

"Figs cure foul breath, strengthen the mouth and the bone, grow hair, do away with ailment, so there is no need for medicine.''14 "Eat pears, as they cheer up the heart and calm down stomach pains, by Allah's permission.''

These are some of the Traditions and Texts. Besides, many authors have compiled special chapters dealing with food, nourishments and their utilities, so asto keep the body in proper health.

Islam rejects self-torture by depriving the body from the lawful pleasures of food and drink -the self - torture that is called for by those who believe that resisting the natural inclination of the body and torturing it with hunger, thirst and deprivation would bring up spiritual strength and improve psychological and moral faculties. The Qur'an condemns this attitude of the deviationists towards bodily pleasures and the delicacies Allah has bestowed on His servants. It says: "Say: Who has forbidden the adornment of Allah which He has brought forth for His servants, and the good provisions?...'' Sure Al-A rat 7:32

B .Marriage:

Islam takes care of all aspects of life in an objective and practical way, giving the body and life their due. Of those bodily and vital questions, which Islam takes good care of, is that of marriage and sexual relations to preserve the human species, to provide stability and spiritual happiness, and to enjoy physical pleasures by man.

Allah the Exalted says: "And of His signs is this: He created for you mates from yourselves that you might find rest in them, and He ordained between you love and mercy.'' Sura Al-Rum 30:21

".... And those of whom ye seek content by marrying them, give unto them their portions as a duty....'' Sura Al-Nis8 4:24

So, by matrimonial relations the idea of life can be completed, and the two parts of the physical human system may be united, and the spiritual emptiness and loneliness is apt to be filled up. Through this, matrimonial meeting and the moral and physical sexual unity can reach completion. Islam encourages marriage, shows it love able, and cherishes sexual pleasures, so as to provide man with moral comfort, and a happy feeling of security, and to protect the body against depravity and tension which often develop into cases of sickness affecting soul and body. Thus the Qur'an says: "And of His signs is that: He created for you mates from yourselves that you may find rest in them, and He ordained between you love and mercy.'' Sura Al-Rum 30:21

psychologically, the Islamic idea of marriage is directed to fill up moral emptiness, and to produce a feeling of security, amity and mutual sympathy. It goes without saying that this humane feeling-the feeling of amity, love and stability - has great effect on the progress of human life, on human conduct in society, and also soundly protects man's moral and physical health. This is significant from the importance of its motives and aims. The Prophet S.A said: "I like nothing from your world except women and perfumes''15 Imam Al-Sadiq A.S said:

"I do not think that a man would get better in faith without being more in love with women.''16 "Of Prophets' be haviour is to love women.''17 "People have no better pleasure in this world and in the Hereafter than that obtained from women, according to Allah's saying: 'Beautified for mankind is love of desires that come from women and offspring...'' Sura Al/main 3:14

The Messenger of Allah S.A said:

"The best of your women is the prolific, affectionate, virtuous, dear to her family, humble to her spouse, displays her charms to her husband,but chastc to others, listens to what he says, obeys his orders, offers him whatever he wants from her when alone, but not in an unabashed way as man"18 Imam Ali A.S said:

"Marry, as the Messenger of Allah said: Whoever wants to follow my Tradition, then my Tradition is marriage"19

C. Clothing and Elegance:

Clothes play a two-sided role in life: On one hand they complete the natural appearance of the body as the body has a certain degree of resistance in respect to other natural surrounding circumstances, such as heat, coldness, humidity, vaporization, etc. So, the clothes are a protective means which keep the body sound and balances it in respect to the natural conditions around it. Man resorts to wearing clothes so as to cover his body and protect it against those natural effects and factors.

Besides this protective role of the clothes, they play another role, which is the role of adornment, beautification and covering the genitals and the ugliness of nudity.. Islam takes care of the clothes and of good appearance, elegance and beauty. The wise Qur'an does not neglect this side of the necessities of life and body, and peoples' inclination to adornment and beautification. In fact, it stresses and confirms this aspect of life, giving man the right to practice it, as God-given blessings:

"O Children of Adam! We have indeed sent down to you clothing to cover your shame...'' Sura Al-A raf 7:26

"Say: Who hath forbidden the adornment of Allah which He has brought forth for His servants...'' Sura Al-A raf 7:32

"And the cattle He created for you, you have in them warm clothing and itses, and of them yuu eat. And there is beauty in them for you, when you drive them bock home, and when you send them forth to pasture.'' Sura Al- Nahl 16:5&6

"And He it is Who has constrained the sea to be of service that you may eat fresh meat from it, and bring forth from it ornaments which you wear.'' Sura Al- Nahl 16 14

Thus, religion has given its approval concerning adornment and beauty, and connected the aesthetic pleasures with the ideological concepts of faith, asserting that man's enjoying of ornamental and aesthetic pleasures is but one of Allah's blessings. It makes man content and happy, and inspires in him love, pleasure and radiance, through a deep feeling of purity and high evaluation of the meanings and values of humanity. There is no wonder, then, that the Qur'an takes such an attitude, because man's inclination towards beauty is an innate feeling stemming from the soul's native direction towards perfection and quest for content and happiness.

The Muslim's awareness of aesthetic topics and values is not confined solely to a sensory feeling and a passing emotional phase. It actually goes beyond that to awaken inside him the flame of spiritual illumination, and the conscious feelings which draws the soul from its physical stagnancy and primitive animal instincts towards the celestial world and moral guidance. This feeling, thus, I becomes a means of spiritual development, and moral completion, making enjoyable the delicacies of life, a bridge connecting man to his Creator. Man is capable of comprehending all these facts through experiencing an alert feeling of the aesthetic values and topics-clothing, elegance and good appearance. When these feelings are reflected on his innerself, they interact and combine with it to form a living picture of good taste. Such feelings become a conduct and help human attitudes to stand aloof from evil and deformed practices which disfigure the spirit of beauty and establish pictures of ugliness and disgust.

There are so many Traditions stressing the importance which Islam attaches to clothing. eleganceand good appearance, of which we cite those uttered by Imam Ta'far ibn Muhammad Al-Sadiq A.S, quoting Tmam All ''Allah is Beautiful and loves beauty, and loves to see the signs of being well-off on His servant.''20 Imam AI-Sadiq A.S. told one of his companions:

"The display of prosperity is more liked by Allah than its preservation. So, take care not to dress except in the best of your people's fashion.'' One of Lmam Al-Sadiq's companions has narrated that somebody asked the Imam: "May Allah reform you! you say that Ali ibn Abi Talib A.S. used to wear rough dresses, each bought for four Dirhams or so, while we see you wearing fine dresses The Imam told him: "Au ibn Abi Talib A.S. used to do so when that was not denied The economic condition of the muslims was not so good. If he wears that now he will be defamed. So, the best dress for an age is the dress of the people of that age. But when our Mahdi appears, he will wear like Ali A.S. and will behave like him, too.''21

Another of the Imam's companions says: "I asked Aba Abdullah the Imam, if a man had a wafra22 should he part it or leave it? He said: "He should part it.''23 The Prophet S.A. said: "Whoever grows hair, he should either take good care of it, or shave it.''24 Imam Al - Rida A. S. said:

"Perfume is of the prophets' habits .''25

The Prophet S. A. is quoted to have said:

"My friend Gabreal A. S. told me: use perfume every alternate day, but do not leave it on Fridays ·''26 By tallying the Qur'anic verses on this subject with the concepts of the stated Traditions - in addition to tens of other Traditions which speak of Islam's point of view concerning human behaviour, - one may conclude that Islam encourages the Muslim individual and the Muslim society to be elegant, neat and of good appearance, so that they may sense the delicacy of existence, and the spirit of creative beauty. Allah's innovations inspire their hearts and pull them towards the great aesthetic truth manifest in the sacred Divine Attributtes which overwhelm mankind with happiness and divine love, increasing their rememberance of His blessings, and their thanks to Him.

To prove Islam's respect for beauty, it is sufficient to note that it has made beauty an encouraging reward, granted to man in Paradise. The Qur'an speaks of no blessings in the Hereafter unless it emanates them with illumination of beauty, and never mentions the rewards alloted to the benevolents without speaking first of the attraction and loveliness of beauty and the aesthetic pleasure derived from it. A fact which confirms that the Qur'an regards beauty as one of the most essential subjects of the existence in man's world, worthy of being presented as a reward to the excellent prophets, martyrs and saints in Paradise.

D. Rest and Sleep:

The Human body is an active machine which exerts effort and energy to resist the world around it. Moving and working exhaust a considerable quantity of its energy and power, and thus, it feels tired because of the confusion of the balance of the body's powers in respect to the powers of nature. This sense of fatigue felt by the body is caused by its continual loss of energy and the effort used.

This loss weakens resistance and forces the body to a hault. It looks for a rest in a safe and comfortable place, in order to rebuild itself anew, keeping away the tiring results of movements. It then falls into a sound sleep. Sleep is not man's invention, nor is it a physical accident that imposes itself on man. It is a part of the precise system of existence which has been ordained by the Wise Creator:

"..The handiwork of Allah Who made all things perfectly. Surely He is aware of what you do ." Sure Al - Naml 27:88

Had sleep not been a part of the body's system, there would have been a defficiency in the order of creation and the physical arrangement of man's body. Therefore, Allah' the All-wise and the - All Knowing, ordaind that sleep should be a rest and stillness for man: "And of His signs is your sleeping by night and day..." Sura Al - Rum 30:23

So, slumber is one of Allah's blessing, needed by the body, as through a period of temporary absence from feeling the reactions of the outer world which is tiresome, the body would get a chance to rest, rebuild and recover the lost energy. The Glorious Qur'an and the Traditions encourage rest, sleep and stillness at night, and a nap at daytime, so that man may enjoy comfort and happiness in life, and avoid greed and covetousness in acquiring wealth through too severe endeavours and hardship, badly affecting his health and comfort, and exposing him to diverse physical, and nervous strains, causing him to lose his happiness and enjoyment in life.

Therefore, the Qur'an prescribes rest and sleep so that man may get his necessary share of them. It says:

"And He it is who made night a covering for you, and sleep a repose..." Sura Al - Furqan 25:4 7

Yet, much as this sleep is essential for man, Islam warns against sleeping for long periods, except as long as needed, so that he may not go beyond the limit of the need, and be overcome by laziness and indolence. To Islam, man should be a mass of activity and production, and a charge offering good and innovation. He should not be allowed to remain idle, nor should he be played with. Consequently, Islam dislikes idleness, aimlessness, wasting of man's time and energy on slumber and laziness. Imam Al - Sadiq A. S. said:

"Too much sleep takes away both religion and the world."27 Imam Au ibn Musa Al - Rida A. S. said:

"Allah the Exalted detests the aimless and the slumberer."28

E. Physical Exercises:

Sports train the body through physical movements and exercises, and give it strength, grace, liveliness and ability, enabling it to endure hard work and difficulties. They also help him to resist illness and weakness, and achieve bigger objectives and present better offerings to life. Sports build up a feeling of power, magnanimity and strength. They also grow the spirit of patience, bravery and self-confidence. Islam believes in power, magnanimity and activity, and fights against irresponsibility, laziness, flabbiness and inactivity. A Tradition says: "Beware of laziness and boredom, because if you get lazy you will not work, and if you are bored you will not give one's due ."29 Another Tradition says:

"Avoid wishes, as they take away the splendour of what you are given, make you belittle Allah's gifts in your eyes, and result in your grief over what you had fancied to yourselves."30

"Laziness and impotence merge, as things merge, resulting into poverty."31 To these spiritual goals the Qur'an calls its people, and encourages them, when bringing-up their generations, to implant in them the spirit of courage and strength. Allah the Exalted says:

"And prepare against them what force you can..." Sure Al-An tel 8:60 To the same effect comes the Prophet's advice to the Muslims to bring-up their sons physically strong. He said "Teach your sons swimming, archery and horseman- ship".

By this invitation to sports and chivalry, the Prophet widely opens the doors to all sorts of physical training and athletic exercises which help to build the body and preserve its abilities.

All Traditions and Narratives confirm and encourage sports. They even speak of the Prophet's participation in tournaments.watching them and encouraging them.Imam Ali ibn Al-Husayn A.S. said:

"The Messenger of Allah S.A. raced horses and ordered for the winners quantities of silver ."32 Lmam Al-Sadiq is quoted to have said:

"The Messenger of Allah S.A. raced lean horses from Al-Hayfa to the mosque of Bani Zorayq, for three date-palms as prizes, giving the first three winners a cluster of dates each ."33

He also said, quoting his fore-fathers, the Prophet's progeny, A.S.: "Archery is an arrow of Islam ."34

He quoted The Prophet s explanation of the Jo flowing Qur'anic Verse, "Make ready for them all thou canst of armed force , to have said: "That is archery ."35 Imam Al-Sadiq A.S. said:

"The idolaters raided the pastures of Al-Madina. A caller shouted: What a bad morning! The Prophet S.A. heard the cry, while he was attending the horses. He jumped on his horse to catch the enemy. The first of his comrades to overtake him was Abu Qarada. The Prophet's saddle-flaps were made of palm-fibres, giving no feeling of joy or contentment. They chased the enemy, but found no body. Others arrived on their horses. Abu Qatada said: O Messenger of Allah! the enemy has gone. How about a race ? The Prophet agreed. They raced, the Messenger of Allah S.A. was the winner. He, then, told them: lam the son of the Awatik36 of Qureish. It is my horse, Al-Bohr the Sea"37

Chapter Eight: Traditional Art as Fountain of Knowledge and Grace

Law and art are the children of the Intellect.

Plato, LAWS

Beauty absolutely is the cause of all things being in harmony (consonantia) and of illumination (claritas); because, moreover, in the likeness of light it sends forth to everything the beautifying distributives of its over fontal raying; and for that it summons all things to itself.

Dionysius the Areopagite, DE DIVINIS NOMINIBUS

Tradition speaks to man not only through human words but also through other forms of art. Its message is written not only upon pages of books and within the grand phenomena of nature but also upon the face of those works of traditional and especially sacred art which, like the words of sacred scripture and the forms of nature, are ultimately a revelation from that Reality which is the source of both tradition and the cosmos. Traditional art is inseparable from sacred knowledge because it is based upon a science of the cosmic which is of a sacred and inward character and in turn is the vehicle for the transmission of a knowledge which is of a sacred nature. Traditional art is at once based upon and is a channel for both knowledge and grace or that scientia sacra which is both knowledge and of a sacred character. Sacred art which lies at the heart of traditional art has a sacramental function and is, like religion itself, at once truth and presence, and this quality is transmitted even to those aspects of traditional art which are not strictly speaking sacred art, that is, are not directly concerned with the liturgical, ritual, cultic, and esoteric elements of the tradition in question but which nevertheless are created according to traditional norms and principles.1

To understand how traditional art is related to knowledge of the sacred and sacred knowledge, it is necessary first of all to clarify what is meant by traditional art. Since we have already identified religion with that which binds man to God and which lies at the heart of tradition, it might be thought that traditional art is simply religious art. This is not at all the case, however, especially since in the West from the Renaissance onward, traditional art has ceased to exist while religious art continues. Religious art is considered religious because of the subject or function with which it is concerned and not because of its style, manner of execution, symbolism, and nonindividual origin. Traditional art, however, is traditional not because of its subject matter but because of its conformity to cosmic laws of forms, to the laws of symbolism, to the formal genius of the particular spiritual universe in which it has been created, its hieratic style, its conformity to the nature of the material used, and, finally, its conformity to the truth within the particular domain of reality with which it is concerned.2 A naturalistic painting of Christ is religious art but not at all traditional art whereas a medieval sword, book cover, or even stable is traditional art but not directly religious art although, because of the nature of tradition, indirectly even pots and pans produced in a traditional civilization are related to the religion which lies at the heart of that tradition.3

Traditional art is concerned with the truths contained in the tradition of which it is the artistic and formal expression. Its origin therefore is not purely human. Moreover, this art must conform to the symbolism inherent in the object with which it is concerned as well as the symbolism directly related to the revelation whose inner dimension this art manifests. Such an art is aware of the essential nature of things rather than their accidental aspects. It is in conformity with the harmony which pervades the cosmos and the hierarchy of existence which lies above the material plane with which art deals, and yet penetrates into this plane. Such an art is based on the real and not the illusory so that it remains conformable to the nature of the object with which it is concerned rather than imposing a subjective and illusory veil upon it.

Traditional art, moreover, is functional in the most profound sense of this term, namely, that it is made for a particular use whether it be the worshiping of God in a liturgical act or the eating of a meal. It is, therefore, utilitarian but not with the limited meaning of utility identified with purely earthly man in mind. Its utility concerns pontifical man for whom beauty is as essential a dimension of life and a need as the house that shelters man during the winter cold. There is no place here for such an idea as “art for art's sake,” and traditional civilizations have never had museums nor ever produced a work of art just for itself.4 Traditional art might be said to be based on the idea of art for man's sake, which, in the traditional context where man is God's vicegerent on earth, the axial being on this plane of reality, means ultimately art for God's sake, for to make something for man as a theomorphic being is to make it for God. In traditional art there is a blending of beauty and utility which makes of every object of traditional art, provided it belongs to a thriving traditional civilization not in the stage of decay, something at once useful and beautiful.

It is through its art that tradition forges and forms an ambience in which its truths are reflected everywhere, in which men breathe and live in a universe of meaning in conformity with the reality of the tradition in question. That is why, in nearly every case of which we have a historical record, the tradition has created and formalized its sacred art before elaborating its theologies and philosophies. Saint Augustine appears long after the sarcophagus art of the catacombs which marks the beginning of Christian art, as Buddhist architecture and sculpture came long before Nāgarjuna. Even in Islam, which developed its theological and philosophical schools rapidly, even the early Mu‘tazilites, not to speak of the Ash‘arites or al-Kindī and the earliest Islamic philosophers, follow upon the wake of the construction of the first Islamic mosques which were already distinctly Islamic in character. In order to breathe and function in a world, religion must remold that world not only mentally but also formally; and since most human beings are much more receptive to material forms than to ideas and material forms leave the deepest effect upon the human soul even beyond the mental plane, it is the traditional art which is first created by the tradition in question. This is especially true of sacred art which exists already at the beginning of the tradition for it is related to those liturgical and cultic practices which emanate directly from the revelation.

Therefore, the first icon is painted by Saint Luke through the inspiration of the angel, the traditional chanting of the Vedas is “revealed” with the Vedas, the Quranic psalmody originates with the Prophet himself, etc. The role of traditional art in the forging of a particular mentality and the creation of an atmosphere in which contemplation of the most profound metaphysical truths is made possible are fundamental to the understanding of both the character of traditional art and the sapiential dimension of tradition itself.

From this point of view art is seen as a veil that hides but also reveals God. There are always within every tradition those who have belittled the significance of forms of art in that they have gone beyond them, but this has always been in a world in which these forms have existed, not where they have been cast aside and destroyed. Those who have eschewed forms of art have been certain types of contemplatives who have realized the supraformal realities, those who, to use the language of Sufism, having broken the nutshell and eaten the nut inside, cast the shell aside. But obviously one cannot throw away a shell that one does not even possess. To go beyond forms is one thing and to fall below them another. To pierce beyond the phenomenal surface to the noumenal reality, hence to see God through forms and not forms as veils of the Divine is one thing and to reject forms of traditional art in the name of an imagined abstract reality above formalism is quite another. Sacred knowledge in contrast to desacralized mental activity is concerned with the supraformal Essence but is perfectly aware of the vital significance of forms in the attainment of the knowledge of that Essence. This knowledge even when speaking of the Supreme Reality above all forms does so in a chant which is in conformity with the laws of cosmic harmony and in a language which, whether prose or poetry, is itself an art form.5 That is why the possessor of such a knowledge in its realized aspect is the first person to confirm the significance of forms of traditional art and the relation of this art to the truth and the sacred; for art reflects the truth to the extent that it is sacred, and it emanates the presence of the sacred to the extent that it is true.

It is of course pontifical or traditional man who is the maker of traditional art; therefore, his theomorphic nature is directly related to this art and its significance. Being a theomorphic creature, man is himself a work of art. The human soul when purified and dressed in the garment of spiritual virtues6 is itself the highest kind of beauty in this world, reflecting directly the Divine Beauty. Even the human body in both its male and female forms is a perfect work of art, reflecting something of the essentiality of the human state. Moreover, there is no more striking reflection of Divine Beauty on earth than a human face in which physical and spiritual beauty are combined. Now man is a work of art because God is the Supreme Artist. That is why He is called al-muṣawwir in Islam, that is, He who creates forms,7 why Śiva brought the arts down from Heaven, why in the medieval craft initiations, as in Freemasonry, God is called the Grand Architect of the Universe. But God is not only the Grand Architect or Geometer; He is also the Poet, the Painter, the Musician, This is the reason for man's ability to build, write poetry, paint, or compose music, although not all forms of art have been necessarily cultivated in all traditions-the types of art developed

depending upon the spiritual and also ethnic genius of a traditional world and humanity.

Being “created in the image of God” and therefore a supreme work of art, man is also an artist who, in imitating the creative powers of his Maker, realizes his own theomorphic nature. The spiritual man, aware of his vocation, is not only the musician who plucks the lyre to create music. He is himself the lyre upon which the Divine Artist plays, creating the music which reverberates throughout the cosmos, for as Rūmī says, “We are like the lyre which thou plucketh.”8 If Promethean man creates art not in imitation but in competition with God, hence the naturalism in Promethean art which tries to imitate the outward form of nature, pontifical man creates art in full consciousness of his imitating God's creativity through not competition with but submission to the Divine Model which tradition provides for him. He therefore imitates nature not in its external forms but in its manner of operation as asserted so categorically by Saint Thomas. If in knowing God man fulfills his essential nature as homo sapiens, in creating art he also fulfills another aspect of that nature as homo faber. In creating art in conformity with cosmic laws and in imitation of realities of the archetypal world, man realizes himself, his theomorphic nature as a work of art made by the hands of God; and likewise in creating an art based on his revolt against Heaven, he separates himself even further from his own Divine Origin. The role of art in the fall of Promethean man in the modern world has been central in that this art has been both an index of the new stages of the inner fall of man from his sacred norm and a major element in the actualization of this fall, for man comes to identify himself with what he makes.

It is not at all accidental that the break up of the unity of the Christian tradition in the West coincided with the rise of the Reformation. Nor is it accidental that the philosophical and scientific revolts against the medieval Christian world view were contemporary with the nearly complete destruction of traditional Christian art and its replacement by a Promethean and humanistic art which soon decayed into that unintelligible nightmare of baroque and rococo religious art that drove many an intelligent believer out of the church. The same phenomenon can be observed in ancient Greece and the modern Orient. When the sapiential dimension of the Greek tradition began to decay, Greek art became humanistic and this-worldly, the art which is already criticized by Plato who held the sacerdotal, traditional art of ancient Egypt in such high esteem. Likewise, in the modern East, intellectual decline has everywhere been accompanied by artistic decline. Conversely, wherever one does observe major artistic creations of a traditional character, there must be a living intellectual and sapiential tradition present even if nothing is known of it externally. Even if at least until very recently the West knew nothing of the intellectual life of Safavid Persia,9 one could be sure that the creation of even one dome like that of the Shaykh Luṭfallāh mosque or the Shāh mosque, which are among the greatest masterpieces of traditional art and architecture, would be itself proof that such an intellectual life existed at that time. A living orthodox tradition with its sapiential dimension intact is essential and necessary for the production

of major works of traditional art, especially sacred art, because of that inner nexus which exists between traditional art and sacred knowledge.

Traditional art is brought into being through such a knowledge and is able to convey and transmit this knowledge. It is the vehicle of an intellectual intuition and a sapiential message which transcends both the individual artist and the collective psyche of the world to which he belongs. On the contrary, humanistic art is able to convey only individualistic inspirations or at best something of the collective psyche to which the individual artist belongs but never an intellectual message, the sapience which is our concern. It can never become the fountain of either knowledge or grace because of its divorce from those cosmic laws and the spiritual presence which characterize traditional art.

Knowledge is transmitted by traditional art through its symbolism, its correspondence with cosmic laws, its techniques, and even the means whereby it is taught through the traditional craft guilds which in various traditional civilizations have combined technical training in the crafts with spiritual instruction. The presence of the medieval European guilds,10 the Islamic guilds (aṣnāf and fuṭuwwāt), some of which survive to this day,11 the training of potters by Zen masters,12 or of metallurgists in initiatic circles in certain primitive societies,13 all indicate the close nexus that has existed between the teaching of the techniques of the traditional arts or crafts, which are the same as the arts in a traditional world, and the transmission of knowledge of a cosmological and sometimes metaphysical order.

But in addition to these processes for the transmission of knowledge related to the actual act of creating a work or of explaining the symbolism involved, there is an innate rapport between artistic creation in the traditional sense and sapience. This rapport is based on the nature of man himself as the reflection of the Divine Norm, and also on the inversion which exists between the principial and the manifested order. Man and the world in which he lives both reflect the archetypal world directly and inversely according to the well-known principle of inverse analogy. In the principial order God creates by externalizing. His “artistic” activity is the fashioning of His own “image” or “form.” On the human plane this relation is reversed in that man's “artistic” activity in the traditional sense involves not the fashioning of an image in the cosmogonic sense but a return to his own essence in conformity with the nature of the state of being in which he lives. Therefore, the “art” of God implies an externalization and the art of man an internalization. God fashions what God makes and man is fashioned by what man makes;14 and since this process implies a return to man's own essence, it is inalienably related to spiritual realization and the attainment of knowledge. In a sense, Promethean art is based on the neglect of this principle of inverse analogy. It seeks to create the image of Promethean man outwardly, as if man were God. Hence, the very “creative process” becomes not a means of interiorization and recollection but a further separation from the Source leading step by step to the mutilation of the image of man as imago Dei, to the world of subrealism-rather than surrealism-and to purely individualistic subjectivism. This subjectivism is as far removed from the theomorphic image of man as possible; the art it creates cannot in any way

act as a vehicle for the transmission of knowledge or grace, although certain cosmic qualities occasionally manifest themselves even in the nontraditional forms of art, since these qualities are like the rays of the sun which finally shine through some crack or opening no matter how much one tries to shut one's living space from the illumination of the light of that Sun which is both light and heat, knowledge, love and grace.15

To understand the meaning of traditional art in its relation to knowledge, it is essential to grasp fully the significance of the meaning of form as used in the traditional context (as forma, morphē, nāma, ṣūrah, etc.). In modern thought dominated by a quantitative science, the significance of form as that which contains the reality of an object has been nearly lost. It is therefore necessary to recall the traditional meaning of form and remember the attempts made by not only traditional authors but also certain contemporary philosophers and scholars to bring out the ontological significance of form.16 According to the profound doctrine of Aristotelian hylomorphism, which serves so well for the exposition of the metaphysics of art because it originated most likely as an intellectual intuition related to traditional art, an object is composed of form and matter in such a way that the form corresponds to that which is actual and matter to what is potential in the object in question. Form is that by which an object is what it is. Form is not accidental to the object but determines its very reality. It is in fact the essence of the object which the more metaphysical Neoplatonic commentators of Aristotle interpreted as the image or reflection of the essence rather than the essence itself, the essence belonging to the archetypal world. In any case, form is not accidental but essential to an object whether it be natural or man-made. It has an ontological reality and participates in the total economy of the cosmos according to strict laws. There is a science of forms, a science of a qualitative and not quantitative nature, which is nevertheless an exact science, or objective knowledge, exactitude not being the prerogative of the quantitative sciences alone.

From the point of view of hylomorphism, form is the reality of an object on the material level of existence. But it is also, as the reflection of an archetypal reality, the gate which opens inwardly and “upwardly” unto the formless Essence. From another point of view, one can say that each object possesses a form and a content which this form “contains” and conveys. As far as sacred art is concerned, this content is always the sacred or a sacred presence placed in particular forms by revelation which sanctifies certain symbols, forms, and images to enable them to become “containers” of this sacred presence and transforms them into vehicles for the journey across the stream of becoming. Moreover, thanks to those sacred forms which man is able to transcend from within, man is able to penetrate into the inner dimension of his own being and, by virtue of that process, to gain a vision of the inner dimension of all forms. The three grand revelations of the Real, or theophanies, namely, the cosmos or macrocosm, man or the microcosm, and religion, are all comprised of forms which lead to the formless, but only the third enables man to penetrate to the world beyond forms, to gain a vision of forms of both the outer world and his own soul, not as veil but as theophany. Only the sacred forms invested with the transforming power of the sacred

through revelation and the Logos which is its instrument can enable man to see God everywhere.

Since man lives in the world of forms, this direct manifestation of the Logos which is revelation or religion in its origin cannot but make use of forms within which man is located. It cannot but sanctify certain forms in order to allow man to journey beyond them. To reach the formless man has need of forms, The miracle of the sacred form lies in fact in its power to aid man to transcend form itself. Traditional art is present not only to remind man of the truths of religion which it reflects in man's fundamental activity of making, as religious ethics or religious law does for man's doing, but also to serve as a support for the contemplation of the Beyond which alone gives ultimate significance to both man's making and man's doing. To denigrate forms as understood in traditional metaphysics is to misunderstand, by token of the same error, the significance of the formless Essence.

At the root of this error which mistakes form for limitation and considers “thought” or “idea” in its mental sense as being more important than form is the abuse of the terms abstract and concrete in modern thought.17 Modern man, having lost the vision of the Platonic “ideas,” confuses the concrete reality of what scientia sacra considers as idea with mental concept and then relegates the concrete to the material level. As a result, the physical and the material are automatically associated with the concrete, while ideas, thoughts, and all that is universal, including even the Divinity, are associated with the abstract. Metaphysically, the rapport is just the reverse. God is the concrete Reality par excellence compared to Whom everything else is an abstraction; and on a lower level the archetypal world is concrete and the world below it abstract. The same relation continues until one reaches the world of physical existence in which form is, relatively speaking, concrete and matter the most abstract entity of all.

The identification of material objects with the concrete and mental concepts with the abstract has had the effect of not only destroying the significance of form vis-à-vis matter on the physical plane itself but also obliterating the significance of the bodily and the corporeal as a source of knowledge. This tendency seems to be the reverse of the process of exteriorization and materialization of knowledge, but it is in reality the other side of the same coin. The same civilization that has produced the most materialistic type of thought has also shown the least amount of interest in the “wisdom of the body,” in physical forms as a source of knowledge, and in the noncerebral aspects of the human microcosm as a whole. As mentioned already, those within the modern world who have sought to regain knowledge of a sacred order have been also those who have protested most vehemently against this overcerebral interpretation of human experience and who have sought to rediscover the “wisdom of the body,” even if this has led in many cases to all kinds of excesses. One does not have to possess extraordinary perspicacity to realize that there is much more intelligence and in fact “food for thought” in the drumbeats of a traditional tribe in Africa than in many a book of modern philosophy. Nor is there any reason why a Chinese landscape painting should not bear a more direct and succinct metaphysical message than not only a philosophical treatise which

is antimetaphysical but even one which favors metaphysics, but in which, as a result of a weakness of logic or presentation, the truth of metaphysical ideas is bearly discernible.

The consequence of this inversion of the rapport between the abstract and the concrete has in any case been a major impediment in the appreciation of the significance of forms in both the traditional arts and sciences and the understanding of the possibility of forms of art as vehicles for knowledge of the highest order. This mentality has also prevented many people from appreciating the traditional doctrines of art and the nonhuman and celestial origin of the forms with which traditional art is concerned.

According to the principles of traditional art, the source of the forms which are dealt with by the artist is ultimately divine. As Plato, who along with Plotinus has provided some of the most profound teachings on traditional art in the West, asserts, art is the imitation of paradigms which, whether visible or invisible, reflect ultimately the world of ideas.18 At the heart of tradition lies the doctrine that art is the nemesis of paradeigma, the invisible model or exemplar. But to produce a work of art which possesses beauty and perfection the artist must gaze at the invisible for as Plato says, “The work of the creator, whenever he looks to the unchangeable and fashions the form and nature of his work after an unchangeable partem, must necessarily be made fair and perfect, but when he looks to the created order only, and uses a created pattern, it is not fair or perfect.”19

Likewise in India, the origin of the form later externalized by the artist in stone or bronze, on wood or paper, has always been considered to be of a supraindividual origin belonging to the level of reality which Platonism identified with the world of ideas. The appropriate art form is considered to be accessible only through contemplation and inner purification. It is only through them that the artist is able to gain that angelic vision which is the source of all traditional art for at the beginning of the tradition the first works of sacred art, including both the plastic and the sonoral, were made by the angels or devas themselves. In the well-known Śukranītisāra of Śukrācarya, for example, it is stated, “One should make use of the visual-formulae proper to the angels whose images are to be made. It is for the successful accomplishment of this practice (yoga) of visual-formulation that the lineaments of images are prescribed. The human-imager should be expert in this visual-contemplation, since thus, and in no other way, and verily not by direct observation, [can the end be achieved].”20

The same type of teachings can be found in all traditions which have produced a sacred art. If the origin of the forms used by this art were not “celestial,” how could an Indian statue convey the very principle of life from within? How could we look at an icon and experience ourselves being looked upon by the gaze of eternity? How could a Chinese or Japanese butterfly capture the very essence of the state of being a butterfly? How could Islamic ornamentation reveal on the physical plane the splendor of the mathematical world considered not as abstraction but as concrete archetypal reality? How could one stand at the portal of the Chartres Cathedral and experience standing in the center of the cosmic order if the makers of that

cathedral had not had a vision of that center from whose perspective they built the cathedral? Anyone who grasps the significance of traditional art will understand that the origin of the forms with which this art deals is nothing other than that immutable world of the essences or ideas which are also the source of our thoughts and knowledge. That is why the loss of sacred knowledge or gnosis and the ability to think anagogically-not only analogically-goes hand in hand with the destruction of traditional art and its hieratic formal style.21

The origin of forms in traditional art can perhaps be better understood if the production of works of art is compared to the constitution of natural objects. According to the Peripatetic philosophies of the medieval period, whether Islamic, Judaic, or Christian, and following Aristotle and his Neoplatonic commentators, objects are composed of form and matter which in the sublunar region undergo constant change. Hence this world is called that of generation and corruption. Whenever a new object comes into being the old form “returns” to the Tenth Intellect, which is called the “Giver of forms” (wahib al-ṣuwar in Arabic), and a new form is cast by this Intellect upon the matter in question.22 Therefore, the origin of forms in the natural world is the Intellect. Now, the form of art must be conceived in the same way as far as traditional art is concerned. The source of these forms is the Intellect which illuminates the mind of the artist or the original artist who is emulated by members of a particular school; the artist in turn imposes the form upon the matter in question, matter here being not the philosophical hylē the material in question, whether it be stone, wood, or anything else which is being fashioned.; In this way the artist imitates the operation of nature23 rather than her external forms.

Moreover, the form which is wed with matter and the form which is the “idea” in the mind of the artist are from the same origin and of the same nature except on different levels of existence. The Greek eidos expresses this doctrine of correspondence perfectly since it means at once form and idea whose origin is ultimately the Logos.

Traditional art, therefore, is concerned with both knowledge and the sacred. It is concerned with the sacred in as much as it is from the domain of the sacred that issue both the tradition itself and the forms and styles which define the formal homogeneity of a particular traditional world.24

It is also concerned with knowledge in as much as man must know the manner of operation of nature before being able to imitate it. The traditional artist, whether he possesses direct knowledge of those cosmic laws and principles which determine that “manner of operation” or has simply an indirect knowledge which he has received through transmission, needs such a knowledge of a purely intellectual nature which only tradition can provide. Traditional art is essentially a science just as traditional science is an art. The ars sine scientia nihil of Saint Thomas holds true for all traditions and the scientia in question here is none other than the scientia sacra and its cosmological applications.

Anyone who has studied traditional art becomes aware of the presence of an impressive amount of science which makes such an art possible. Some of this science is of a technical character which nevertheless remains both

amazing and mysterious. When one asks how Muslim or Byzantine architects created the domes they did create with the endurance that they have had, or how such perfect acoustics were developed in certain Greek amphitheatres or cathedrals, or how the various angles of the pyramids were made to correlate so exactly with astronomical configurations, or how to build a shaking minaret in Isfahan which goes into sympathetic vibration when the minaret next to it is shaken, one is already facing knowledge of an extraordinary complexity which should at least remove those who possessed it from the ranks of naive simpletons. Even on this level, however, despite all the attempts at “demystification” by positivist historians of art or science, there are amazing questions which remain unanswered. The basic one is that these feats, even if they were to be repeated today, could only be done according to physical laws and discoveries which belong to the past two or three centuries and, as far as we know, simply were not known when these structures were constructed. This fact taken in itself implies that there must be other sciences of nature upon which one can build monuments of outstanding durability and remarkable quality. This would also hold for the preparation of dyes whose colors are dazzling to the eye and which cannot be reproduced today, or steel blades, the knowledge of whose metallurgical processes has been lost.

But these are not the only sciences we have in mind. The scientia without which art would be nothing is not just another kind of physics which we happen to have forgotten. It is a science of cosmic harmony, of correspondences, of the multidimensional reality of forms, of sympathy between earthly forms and celestial influences, of the rapport between colors, orientations, configurations, shapes, and also sounds and smells and the soul of man. It is a science which differs from modern science not only in its approach and method but in its nature. Yet it is a science, essentially a sacred science accessible only in the cadre of tradition which alone enables the intellect in its human reflection to realize its full potentialities.25 The difference between this science and modern science is that this science cannot be attained save through intellectual intuition, which in turn requires a certain nobility of character and the acquiring of virtues which are inseparable from knowledge in the traditional context as attested to by the very manner in which both the traditional arts and sciences are taught by the master to the disciple. There are of course exceptions but that is only because the “Spirit bloweth where it listeth.”

The scientia with which art is concerned is therefore related to the esoteric dimension of tradition and not the exoteric. As man is a being who acts and makes things, religion must provide principles and norms for both the world of moral action and the activity of making. Usually exoterism is concerned with that world in which man must act for the good and against evil, but it is not concerned with those principles and norms which govern the correct making of things. These principles cannot but issue from the inner or esoteric dimension of the tradition. That is why the most profound expositions of the meaning of Christian art are found in the writings of such a figure as Meister Eckhart26 or the masters of apophatic and mystical theology in the Orthodox Church.27 That is why also Western Islamicists

and historians of art have had such difficulty in finding sources for the Islamic philosophy, or rather metaphysics, of art while they have been searching in treatises of theology and jurisprudence. Besides the oral tradition which still continues in some parts of the Islamic world, as far as certain cosmological principles pertaining to art are concerned, the written sources do also exist, except that they are not usually seen for what they are. The most profound explanation of the significance of Islamic art is to be found in a work such as the Mathnawī of Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī and not in books of either jurisprudence or kalām which, although very important, concern man's actions and religious beliefs rather than the principles of an interiorizing art which leads man back to the One. There are also treatises of an “occult” nature concerning those arts which can be comprehended only in the light of esoterism.28

Likewise, in Japan it is Zen which has produced the greatest masterpieces of Japanese art, from rock gardens to screen paintings, while those Sung paintings which are among the greatest masterpieces of world art are products of Taoism and not the social aspect of the Chinese tradition associated with Confucian ethics. As Wang Yu, the Chi'ing painter said, “Although painting is only one of the fine arts, it contains the Tao.”29 All art has its Tao, its principle which is related to the principles which dominate the cosmos, while painting being the traditional art par excellence in China manifests the Tao most directly. To paint according to the Tao is not to emulate the outward but the inner principles of things; hence again, the science with the aid of which the Chinese painter captures the very essence of natural forms is by definition related to the esoteric dimension of the tradition. The fruit and application of such an inward science of the cosmos is the Sung painting, the Hindu temple, the mosque or cathedral or all the other masterpieces of traditional art which are immersed in a beauty of celestial origin, while the application of an outward and externalized science of nature which rebelled against the Christian tradition once its esoteric dimension was eclipsed is the subway and the skyscraper. Even when there is some element of beauty in the works produced as a result of the applications of such a science, it is of a fragmented nature and manifests itself only here and there because beauty is an aspect of reality and cannot but manifest itself whenever and wherever there is something which possesses a degree of reality.

There is, however, another basic reason why art which deals with the material plane is related to the esoteric or most inward dimension of tradition. According to the well-known Hermetic saying, “that which is lowest symbolizes that which is highest,” material existence which is the lowest level symbolizes and reflects the Intellect or the archetypal essences which represent the highest level. Through this fundamental cosmological law upon which the science of symbols is based, material form reflects the Intellect in a more direct manner than the subtle level or the pysche which is ontologically higher but which does not reflect the highest level as directly. In various traditions it is taught that the revelation descends not only into the mind and soul but also into the body of the prophet or founder, not to speak of traditions in which the founder as incarnation or avatār is himself the

message. In this case the avatār saves not only through his words and thoughts but also through the beauty of his body which, in the case of Buddhism, is the origin of the whole of Buddhist iconography. In Christianity also it is the blood and body of Christ that is consumed in the Eucharist and not his thoughts, which means that the revelation penetrated into his bodily form.

Even in Islam where the message is clearly distinguished from the messenger, traditional sources teach that the revelation did not only enter the mind but also the body of the Prophet to the extent that, when he received the revelation on horseback, his horse could hardly support the weight and would buckle under it. Also the night of the descent of the Quranic revelation, called “The Night of Power” (laylat al-qadr), is associated with the very body of the Prophet while his nocturnal ascent to Heaven (al-mi‘rāj) is also considered to have been bodily (al-mi‘rāj al-jismānī) according to all traditional sources. All of these instances point to the fact, fundamental for the understanding of traditional art, that the material is the direct reflection of the highest level which is the spiritual and not the intermediate psychic state and that art, although concerned with the most outward plane of existence which is the material, is related by token of this very principle of inversion to what is most inward in a tradition. That is why a canvas as icon can become the locus of Divine Presence and support for the contemplation of the formless; why the mantle of the Holy Virgin performs miracles and attracts pilgrims for centuries; why the face of the earthly beloved is the perfect mirror wherein is reflected the face of that Beloved who is above all form; why man can bow before a symbol of a material nature which has become the locus for the manifestation of an angelic or divine influence. It is also why traditional art and its principles are related to the esoteric and inward dimension of tradition and why it is through traditional art that the esoteric manifests itself upon the plane of the collectivity and makes possible an equilibrium which the exoteric alone could not maintain. It is through the channel of traditional art that a knowledge of a sacred character manifests itself, outwardly cloaked in the dress of beauty which attracts the sensibility of even those who are not able to understand its tenets intellectually, while providing an indispensible spiritual climate and contemplative support for those who do understand its veridical message and whose vocation is to follow the sapiential path.

Traditional art is of course concerned with beauty which, far from being a luxury or a subjective state, is inseparable from reality and is related to the inner dimension of the Real as such. As stated earlier, scientia sacra sees the Ultimate Reality as the Absolute, the Infinite and Perfection or Goodness. Beauty is related to all these hypostases of the Real. It reflects absoluteness in its regularity and order, infinity in its sense of inwardness and mystery, and demands perfection. A masterpiece of traditional art is at once perfect, orderly, and mysterious.30 It reflects the perfection and goodness of the Source, the harmony and order which are also reflected in the cosmos and which are the imprint of the absoluteness of the Principle in manifestation and the mystery and inwardness which open unto the Divine Infinitude Itself. In the sapiential dimension, it is this interiorizing power of beauty

that is emphasized and God is seen especially in His inward “dimension” which is beauty. That is why that great masterpiece of Orthodox spirituality is entitled Philokalia or love of beauty and the famous ḥadīth asserts “God is beautiful and loves beauty.”31

Intelligence which is the instrument and also primary concern of the sapiential path cannot be separated from beauty. Ugliness is also unintelligibility. The illuminated human intellect cannot but be intertwined with that beauty which removes from things their opacity and enables them to shine forth as transparent images and reflections which reveal rather than veil the archetypal realities that are the concern of the intellect, the Logos or Divine Intellect which is the source of the human intellect, being itself both order and mystery and in a sense, the beauty of God. That is why beauty satisfies the human intelligence and provides it with certitude and protection from doubt. There is no skepticism in beauty. The rays of its splendor evaporate all shadows of doubt and the wavering of the uncertain mind. Beauty bestows upon intelligence that highest gift which is certitude. It also melts the hardness of the human soul and brings about the taste of that union which is the fruit of gnosis. The knowledge of the sacred cannot therefore be separated from beauty. Beauty is of course both moral and intellectual. That is why man must possess moral beauty in order to be able to benefit fully from the sacramental function of intelligence. But once the moral conditions are present and beauty becomes a divine attraction rather than seduction, it is able to communicate something of the Center in the periphery, of the Substance in accidents, of the formless Essence in forms.32 In this sense beauty not only transmits knowledge but is inseparable from knowledge of the sacred and sacred knowledge.

Beauty attracts because it is true, for as Plato said, beauty is the splendor of truth. Since beauty is ultimately related to the Infinite, it accompanies that emanation and irradiation of the Real which constitute the levels of existence down to the earthly. As māyā is the shakti of Ātman, beauty as the Divine māyā or Divine Femininity may be said to be the consort of the Real and the aura of the Absolute. All manifestations of the Ultimate Reality are accompanied by this aura which is beauty. One cannot speak of reality in the metaphysical sense without this splendor and radiance which surround it like a halo and which constitute beauty itself. That is why creation is overwhelmingly beautiful. Being and its irradiation as existence cannot but be beautiful, for ugliness, like evil,33 is nothing but the manifestation of a relative nothingness. In the same way that goodness is more real than evil, beauty is more real than ugliness. If one meditates on the beauty of the vast heavens on a starry night and the inexhaustible beauty of the earth during a shining day, one realizes how limited is the domain of ugliness in relation to that beauty, how petty are the ugly monstrosities of human invention through the productions of the machine in comparison with the grandeur of the beauty of the cosmic order, not to speak of the transcendent beauty of the Divine Order, a glimpse of which is occasionally afforded to mortal men on those rare occasions when the beauty of a human face, a natural scene, or a work of sacred art leaves an indelible mark upon the human soul for the whole of life and melts the hard shell of the human ego. That is why beauty

seen in the sapiential perspective, which always envisages beauty in its rapport with God, is a sacrament that elevates man to the realm of the sacred.

Oh Lord thou knowest that even now and again

We never gazed except at Thy beautiful Face.

The beauties of this world are all mirrors of Thy Beauty

In these mirrors we only saw the Face of the King.34

AWHAD AL-DĪN KIRMĀNĪ

It is in the nature of beauty to attract spiritual presence to itself or, in the language of Neoplatonists, to receive the participation of the World Soul. From the gnostic point of view, the earthly function of beauty is therefore to guide man back to the source of this earthly beauty, that is, back to the principial domain. Beautiful forms are an occasion for the recollection of the essences in the Platonic sense.35 They are means of remembrance (anamnēsis) of what man is and the celestial abode from which he has descended and which he carries still within the depth of his being. In this sense, beauty is the means of gaining knowledge; for certain human beings particularly sensitive to beauty, the central means. That is why some of the masters of the sapiential path have gone so far as to assert that a beautiful melody or poem or for that matter any creation of traditional art can crystallize a state of contemplation and bring about a degree of intuitive knowledge in a single moment that would be impossible to even conceive through long periods of study, provided of course the person in question has already purified his soul and clothed it with the beauty of spiritual virtues so as to be qualified for the appreciation of earthly beauty as the reflection of celestial beauty. That is why traditional art is a source of knowledge and grace. It makes possible a return to the world of archetypes and the paradisal abode which is the source of both principial knowledge and the sacred, for beauty is the reflection of the Immutable in the stream of becoming.

Consider creation as pure and crystalline water

In which is reflected the Beauty of the Possessor of Majesty

Although the water of this stream continues to flow

The image of the moon and the stars remain reflected in it.36

RŪMĪ

The power of beauty to carry man upon its wing to the world of the essences and toward the embrace of union with the Beloved is particularly strong in those arts which are concerned with sonority and movement, arts which for that reason are also the most dangerous for those not qualified to bear the powerful attraction which they wield upon the human soul. Such arts as music and dance, which are connected with sound and movement, are like wine that can both inebriate in the spiritual sense of removing the veil of separative consciousness and cause the loss of even normal consciousness and bring about a further fall toward negligence and forgetfulness. That is why in Islam wine is forbidden in this world and reserved for paradise, while music and dancing are confined to Sufism or the esoteric dimension of the tradition, where they play an important role in the operative aspect of the path.

In memory of the banquet of union with Him, in yearning for His Beauty

They have fallen inebriated from the wine which Thou knowest.37

RŪMĪ

Traditional music has a cosmological foundation and reflects the structure of manifested reality. It commences from silence, the unmanifested Reality and returns to silence. The musical work itself is like the cosmos which issues from the One and returns to the One, except that in music the tissues out of which the world is woven are sounds that echo the primordial silence and reflect the harmony that characterizes all that the absolute and infinite Reality manifests.38 Music is not only the first art brought by Śiva into the world, the art through which the asrār-i alast or the mystery of the primordial covenant between man and God in that preeternal dawn of the day of cosmic manifestation is revealed;39 but it is also the key to the understanding of the harmony that pervades the cosmos. It is the handmaid of wisdom itself.40 Moreover, as described in a well-known Muslim popular tale, the soul of Adam was wooed into the temple of the body through the melody of a simple two-stringed instrument,41 and it is through music that the soul is able to flee again from the prison of its earthly confinement. The gnostic hears in music the melodies of the paradise whose ecstasies the music brings about once again. That is why music is like the mystical wine. It cures body and soul, but above all it enables the contemplative to recollect the supernal realities which lie within the root of the very substance of the human soul. Traditional music is a powerful spiritual instrument and, for that very reason, also one which poses a danger for those not prepared to receive its liberating grace.42 That is why music which has turned against cosmic laws and its celestial origins cannot but be an instrument for the demonic and cannot but be the bearer of the dissolving influence of that cacophany which the modern world knows only too well.

As for dance, it, like music, is a direct vehicle for the realization of union. The sacred dance unifies man with the Divine at the meeting point of time and space at that eternal now and immutable center which is the locus of Divine Presence. From the sacred art of dance is born not only those great masterpieces of Hindu art in which Śiva performs the cosmic dance upon the body of his consort Parvati43 but also the temple dances of Bali, the cosmic dances of the American Indians and the native Africans, and, on the highest levels, those esoteric dances connected with initiatic practices leading to union. Among these, one can mention the Sufi dance where the art of sacred dance and music are combined in bringing about recollection and placing man in a point above all time and space in the Divine Presence.

In this form, traditional art complements the quintessence of spiritual practice, which is the prayer of the heart, in actualizing the Divine Light in the body of man seen as the temple of God and in placing man beyond all forms in that now which is none other than eternity.

Since beauty is the splendor of truth, the expression of truth is always accompanied by beauty. The grand expressions of metaphysics are clothed in the garment of beauty whether they be in the language of plastic forms or sounds-such as a Chinese landscape painting or a raga-or in human words such as the Gīta or Sufi poetry. What in fact distinguishes metaphysics and gnosis from profane philosophy is not only the question of truth but also

beauty. Gnosis is the only common ground between poetry and logic, whether formal or mathematical. Wherever one discovers a doctrine which possesses at once mathematical and logical rigor and poetic beauty, it must possess a gnostic aspect. If Khayyām was at once a great poet and an outstanding mathematician, it was because he was first and foremost a gnostic.44 It is only in gnosis or scientia sacra that the rigor of logic and the perfume of poetry meet, for this science is concerned with the truth. The great masterpieces of Oriental metaphysics such as the works of Śankara or Ibn ‘Arabī are also literary masterpieces, a work such as the Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam of Ibn ‘Arabī possessing a remarkable perfection of form to complement the content.45

In the case of Sufism the wedding between truth and beauty is fully manifested in the numerous works which are at once outstanding expressions of sacred knowledge and masterpieces of art. The Gulshan-i rāz (The Rose Garden of Divine Mysteries) of Maḥmūd Shabistarī, written in a few days under direct inspiration of Heaven, is at once a summary of metaphysics and a poem of unparalleled beauty. The poetry of Ibn al-Fāriḍ in Arabic and the Divan of Ḥāfiẓ in Persian represent the most harmonious wedding between expression of esoteric doctrines and perfection of form with the result that this poetry is itself like the wine which inebriates and transmutes the soul. The Mathnawī and Dīwān-i Shams of Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī are oceans of gnosis whose every wave reflects beauty of celestial origin. Its rhymes and rhythms, its rhapsodic trance uplift the soul and elevate it to that peak where alone it is able to grasp the sublime intellectual message of the great poet-saint. In the traditional world, and especially in the Orient, it has always been taken for granted that the truth descends upon the human plane with the aura of beauty which radiates from its presence and expression, like revelation itself which cannot but be beautiful whether that revelation be in the form of the Arabic Quran, Hebrew Torah, and Sanskrit Vedas, or the Buddha and Christ who are themselves considered as the message in their own traditions.

To be sensitive to the beauty of forms, whether natural or belonging to the domain of art, to see in the eye of the child, the wing of the eagle, the crystalline peaks of the mountains which touch the void, as well as in a page of Mamluk Quranic calligraphy, a Japanese Buddha image, or the rosette of the Chartres Cathedral, the signs of the Divine Hand, is to be blessed with a contemplative spirit. To remain aware of the liberating beauty of forms of traditional art as channels of grace of a particular tradition and to be open to the message of these forms is to be blessed with the possibility of reception of sacred knowledge. Traditional art is a source of this sacred knowledge and accompanies all its authentic expressions. The person who has realized sacred knowledge and who, through the path of knowledge, has reached the sacred is himself the best witness to the inextricable bond between knowledge and beauty, for such a person embodies in himself, by virtue of realized sapience, beauty and grace. Realization of sacred knowledge enables man to become himself a work of art, the supreme work of art of the Supreme Artist. To become such a work of art is to become a fountain of knowledge and grace, the prototype of all traditional art in which the artist

emulates the Supreme Artisan and hence produces a work which is at once support for the realization of sacred knowledge, means for its transmission, and an externalization of the perfection which man himself can be if only he were to become what he truly is.

To behold a masterpiece of traditional art is to gain a vision of that reality which constitutes the inner nature of man as a work of the Divine Artisan, of that inner nature which man can reach through knowledge of the sacred and the realization of sacred knowledge. A great work of traditional art is a testament to the beauty of God and an exemplar of what man can be when he becomes himself, as God made him, a perfect work of art, a fountain of knowledge, and a channel of grace for the world in which he lives as the central and axial being that he is by his nature and his destiny. For man to become himself a work of art, as traditionally understood, is for him to become the pontifical man that he is and cannot ultimately cease to be.